Intraspecific competition and spatial heterogeneity alter life history traits in an individual-based model of grasshoppers{*}
Authored by DJ Fielding
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2003.10.014
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
An individual-based model (IBM) was developed to examine the effects of
intraspecific competition and spatial structuring of food on life
history traits of grasshoppers inhabiting temperate-zone grasslands.
Each individual carried real-valued genes which determined size of
offspring and size at maturity, and which were passed on to its
offspring. Size at maturity was a plastic trait, depending on an
individual's growth rate, whereas size of offspring was a fixed trait.
Individuals with more successful combinations of traits produced more
offspring that eventually came to dominate the population. Populations
were food limited and intraspecific competition was either exploitative
or size-based interference. Growth rates and fecundity depended on food
quality, which declined within season as a function of day of year and
the proportion consumed by grasshoppers. Three different spatial
distributions of food quality were examined: uniform, random, and
clumped. Optimal egg size was larger under interference competition and
spatially clumped resources. Reaction norms of size at maturity were
strongly affected by type of competition, and, by spatial distribution
of resources within exploitative competition, but not under interference
competition. The IBM shows promise as a means of analyzing life history
evolution in grasshoppers in relation to processes that arise from
localized interactions between individuals. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Evolution
Dynamics
Body-size
Reaction norms
Population regulation
Phenotypic
plasticity
Melanoplus-sanguinipes orthoptera
Variable food quality
Grassland ecosystem
Acrididae